Popular, trendy, and noteworthy baby names of 2010

Baby name timeline 2010

Which baby names were the most popular in the U.S. in 2010?

Which names saw the steepest rises in usage?

And which names debuted most impressively in the national dataset?

Below you’ll find the answers to all three of these questions, plus some of the other baby names that made gains in 2010. (In parentheses are my guesses about the outside factors influencing certain names.)

Top names

These were the most popular baby names overall in the U.S. in 2010:

Girl names: Most popularBoy names: Most popular
1. Isabella1. Jacob
2. Sophia2. Ethan
3. Emma3. Michael
4. Olivia4. Jayden
5. Ava5. William

Rising names

These baby names saw the largest increases in usage from 2009 to 2010 in terms of number of babies:

Girl names: Top absolute increasesBoy names: Top absolute increases
1. Sophia1. Mason (celebrity baby)
2. Khloe (TV personality)2. Bentley (celebrity baby)
3. Zoey3. Liam
4. Charlotte (TV character)4. Eli (movie character)
5. Zoe5. Easton

These baby names saw the largest increases in usage from 2009 to 2010 in terms of percentage of babies:

Girl names: Top relative increasesBoy names: Top relative increases
1. Collins (movie character)1. Bentlee
2. Tenley (TV personality)2. Raylan (TV character)
3. Elyn3. Bentley (celebrity baby)
4. Tinley4. Bently
5. Aliannah (celebrity baby)5. Kolston

And here’s a selection of the other baby names that saw higher usage in 2010:

Girl names: Other increasesBoy names: Other increases
Alasia (TV personality)Arjen (soccer player)
Aleeah (celebrity baby)Bode (Olympic skier)
Arianny (TV personality)Castle (TV character)
Bellamy (TV personality)Dyland (singer)
Caprica (TV show)Ezio (video game character)
Catelynn (TV personality)Kenzo (celebrity baby)
Charlie (TV character)Kotaro (Chinese zodiac)
Danna (actress)Kyron (news)
Farrah (TV personality)Rajon (basketball player)
Hartley (celebrity baby)Robben (soccer player)
Lux (TV character)Seeley (TV character)
Maci (TV personality)Taiga (Chinese zodiac)
Maelle (Olympic snowboarder)Tiger (Chinese zodiac)
Neda (news)
Payson (TV character)
Quinn (TV character)
Rielle (news)
Rue (book character)
Solara (movie character)
Tamina (movie character)
Tiana (movie character)
Tinsley (TV personality)
Torah (Olympic snowboarder)
Yendi (beauty queen)

Debut names

These were the names that debuted most impressively in the U.S. baby name data in 2010:

Girl names: Top debutsBoy names: Top debuts
1. Tynlee1. Vadhir (TV personality)
2. Khloei2. Jeffren (soccer player)
3. Peyson [2-way tie]3. Brees (football player)
4. Tensley [2-way tie]4. Dastan [tie] (movie character)
5. Rossibell [2-way tie] (beauty queen)5. Neymar [tie] (soccer player)
6. Solanch [2-way tie]

And here’s a selection of the other names that appeared for the first time in the U.S. baby name data in 2010:

Girl names: Other debutsBoy names: Other debuts
Malillany (actress)Koli (TV personality)
Neytiri (movie character)Baze (TV character)
Winry (TV character)Raizo (movie character)
Bethenny (TV personality)Benhur (TV character)
Naleigh (celebrity baby)Breaker (TV personality)
Sookie (TV character)Goodluck (politician)
Josenid (TV personality)Ozil (soccer player)
Koli (TV personality)Ezreal (video game character)
Brees (football player)Simitrio (TV personality)
Dubraska (TV character)Sparrow (celebrity baby)
Loxley (movie)
Satyana (celebrity baby)

If you want to check out another year on the timeline, here’s the baby name timeline main page.

Finally, a few reminders about the Social Security Administration’s baby name data:

  • It only includes names given to at least five babies (of one gender or the other) per year.
  • It does contain mistakes such as misspelled names, misgendered names, and placeholder names (e.g., “Babygirl”).
  • It isn’t very accurate from 1880 to the mid-1930s. Why? Because the SSA was established in the mid-1930s, so the names in the dataset from 1880 to the mid-1930s are not the names of babies, but the names (or nicknames) of adults applying for social security numbers. More importantly, adults born during these decades who never applied for a number are simply not accounted for.

Data source: U.S. Social Security Administration

[Latest update: Sept. 2025, using the 2023 SSA dataset]